﻿46 
  Thietieth 
  Repoet 
  on 
  the 
  State 
  Museum. 
  

  

  Polypoeus 
  connatus 
  Weinm. 
  

  

  Trunks 
  of 
  maple 
  trees, 
  Acer 
  saccharinum. 
  Sandlake. 
  

   October. 
  

  

  Polypoeus 
  (Inodeemei) 
  balsameus 
  n. 
  sp. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  rather 
  thin, 
  corky, 
  plain, 
  about 
  one 
  inch 
  broad, 
  ses- 
  

   sile 
  or 
  spuriously 
  stipitate, 
  slightly 
  and 
  unequally 
  villose- 
  

   tomentose, 
  pale-brown 
  marked 
  with 
  lighter 
  concentric 
  zones 
  ; 
  

   flesh 
  white 
  ; 
  pores 
  short, 
  minute, 
  subrotund, 
  the 
  thin 
  dissepi- 
  

   ments 
  acute, 
  denticulate, 
  white. 
  

  

  Trunks 
  of 
  balsam 
  trees, 
  Abies 
  balsamea. 
  Adirondack 
  Mts. 
  

   August. 
  

  

  The 
  villosity 
  is 
  so 
  slight 
  that 
  it 
  may 
  be 
  easily 
  overlooked. 
  

   It 
  is 
  not 
  uniformly 
  distributed 
  over 
  the 
  whole 
  surface 
  but 
  

   occurs 
  in 
  zones 
  or 
  patches. 
  The 
  species 
  is 
  apparently 
  allied 
  to 
  

   P. 
  zonatus. 
  

  

  Polypoeus 
  obducens 
  Pers. 
  

   Decaying 
  wood. 
  Buffalo. 
  June. 
  Clinton. 
  

  

  Polypoeus 
  callosus 
  Fr. 
  

   Decaying 
  wood. 
  Buffalo. 
  December. 
  Clinton. 
  

  

  Polypoeus 
  faeinellus 
  Fr. 
  

   Decaying 
  wood. 
  Alexandria 
  Bay. 
  July. 
  Clinton. 
  

  

  Hydnum 
  Wetnmanni 
  Fr. 
  

   Decaying 
  wood. 
  Bethlehem. 
  October. 
  

  

  Iepex 
  slnuosus 
  Fr. 
  

  

  Dead 
  branches 
  lying 
  on 
  the 
  ground. 
  Wynantskill, 
  Rens- 
  

   selaer 
  county. 
  November. 
  

  

  Iepex 
  fuscoviolaceus 
  Fr. 
  

  

  Decaying 
  trunks 
  of 
  spruce, 
  Abies 
  nigra. 
  Adirondack 
  Mts. 
  

   July. 
  

  

  Our 
  specimens 
  are 
  not 
  " 
  silky," 
  as 
  required 
  by 
  the 
  descrip- 
  

   tion, 
  but 
  villose 
  or 
  tomentose-villose 
  as 
  in 
  Polyporus 
  hirsutus 
  

   and 
  P. 
  abietinus, 
  the 
  latter 
  of 
  which 
  this 
  species 
  closely 
  resem- 
  

   bles. 
  The 
  hymenium, 
  however, 
  is 
  coarser, 
  more 
  highly 
  colored 
  

   and 
  lamellated 
  to 
  such 
  an 
  extent 
  that 
  young 
  specimens 
  might 
  

   easily 
  be 
  taken 
  for 
  a 
  Lenzites. 
  

  

  Iepex 
  obliquus 
  Fr. 
  

  

  On 
  dead 
  oak 
  and 
  alder 
  trees. 
  North 
  Greenbush, 
  Center 
  and 
  

   Sandlake. 
  October 
  and 
  November. 
  

  

  At 
  first 
  it 
  looks 
  more 
  like 
  a 
  small 
  white 
  orbicular 
  resupinate 
  

   Polyporus 
  than 
  an 
  Irpex. 
  Very 
  common. 
  

  

  